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Book cover of The Bishop
Body, Mind & Health - Fiction, Native American Peoples - Fiction & Literature, Phases of Life - Fiction, Occupations - Fiction

The Bishop

by David Helwig
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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

The renowned Canadian author-poet's new novel is like a majestic oratorio, affecting one profoundly. Helwig subsumes reality and voluptuous imagery in the story of Anglo-Catholic Bishop Henry who is dying of a stroke. In his memory, Henry is a young minister in love with his wife Amelia who vanishes on assignment in Alaska. A chaplain during World War II, Henry then meets the man Amelia had an affair with, among other people who live again in the bishop's thoughts. They are as vivid to the reader as are Henry's devoted parishionershis secretary Rose, also a carpenter, creating things for him she knows he'll never use; a pitiful moron hiding out in the cathedral corners; and all the devoted flock bracing themselves for the inevitable. There is also the shaman Ishakak, drawn magically to Henry's side from the Arctic, to attend his old friend in need. The story, at once sorrowful and uplifting, will linger in readers' minds. (November 12)

Library Journal

Paralyzed, dying, Bishop Henry awaits his release. Though his imperious clerical assistants challenge all comers, friend or ghost, several appear to speed his journey with offerings of love, among them his secretary, an old Inuit shaman from the Arctic, and his lost wife and her lover. Nearby in the cathedral hides Norman, his feeble brain dimly perceiving the union of Now with Eternity. Allusions to the Anglican liturgy, delicate syntax, and a mystical touch make The Bishop a beautiful novel to recommend to any reader who is weary of the obdurate priests in most current fiction. Helwig is a notable Canadian poet and novelist. Maurice Taylor, Brunswick Cty. Lib., Southport, N.C.

Book Details

Published
September 24, 1987
Publisher
Penguin Books Ltd
Pages
240
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780140082319

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